Friday, February 18, 2005

Our Friends, The Torturers

February 18, 2005
OP-ED COLUMNIST

Our Friends, the Torturers
By
BOB HERBERT

The United States has long purported to be outraged over Syria's bad
behavior, the latest flash point being the possible Syrian involvement in
the assassination
of the former Lebanese prime minister, Rafik Hariri.

From the U.S. perspective, Syria is led by a gangster regime that has, among
other things, sponsored terrorism, aided the insurgency in Iraq and engaged
in torture. So here's the question. If Syria is such a bad actor - and it
is - why would the Bush administration seize a Canadian citizen at Kennedy
Airport
in New York, put him on an executive jet, fly him in shackles to the Middle
East and then hand him over to the Syrians, who promptly tortured him?

The administration is trying to have it both ways in its so-called war on
terror. It claims to be fighting for freedom, democracy and the rule of law,
and
it condemns barbaric behavior whenever it is committed by someone else. At
the same time, it is engaged in its own barbaric behavior, while going out
of
its way to keep that behavior concealed from the American public and the
world at large.

The man grabbed at Kennedy Airport and thrown by American officials into a
Syrian nightmare was Maher Arar, a 34-year-old native of Syria who emigrated
to Canada as a teenager. No one, not even the Syrians who tortured him, have
been able to present any evidence linking him to terrorism.

He was taken into custody on the afternoon of Sept. 26, 2002, and was not
released until Oct. 5, 2003. He was never charged, and when he wasn't being
brutalized,
he spent much of his time in an unlit, rat-infested cell that reminded him
of a grave.

Government officials know that this kind of activity is not just wrong but
reprehensible, which is why they won't admit publicly to the policy that
permits
them to kidnap individuals like Mr. Arar and send them off to regimes known
to engage in torture. The policy is known as extraordinary rendition, which
is an extreme variation of a little-known but longstanding legal principle
called rendition. Rendition most commonly refers to the extrajudicial
transfer
of individuals from a foreign country to the United States for the purpose
of answering criminal charges.

Think, for example, of a drug kingpin who is abducted in Colombia and
brought to the U.S. to stand trial for trafficking. The defendant is said to
have
been "rendered" to justice in the U.S.

The courts here have tended to overlook the circumstances surrounding the
seizure of such suspects. But upon arrival in the U.S., the normal rules of
due
process in criminal proceedings kick in, and the suspect is entitled to a
fair trial.

In extraordinary rendition there are no rules. The person seized, presumably
a terror suspect, is thrust into a highly secret zone of utter lawlessness,
with no rights whatever. The entire point of this atrocious exercise is to
transfer the suspect to a regime skilled in the art of torture. It's as if a
cop picked up a suspect on the street and handed him over to the Mafia to
extract a confession. One's guilt or innocence is not relevant. No legal
defense
is permitted. If a mistake is made, too bad.

U.S. officials knew what they were doing when they gave the signal to ship
Mr. Arar to Syria. As far back as 1996, the State Department had this to say
in a report about human rights in Syria:

"Former prisoners and detainees have reported that torture methods include
electrical shocks; pulling out fingernails; the forced insertion of objects
into
the rectum; beatings, sometimes while the victim is suspended from the
ceiling; hyperextension of the spine; and the use of a chair that bends
backwards
to asphyxiate the victim or fracture the spine."

According to the State Department, torture was most likely to occur at one
of the many detention centers run by the Syrian security forces,
"particularly
while the authorities are trying to extract a confession or information
about an alleged crime or alleged accomplices."

Extraordinary rendition is antithetical to everything Americans are supposed
to believe in. It violates American law. It violates international law. And
it is a profound violation of our own most fundamental moral imperative -
that there are limits to the way we treat other human beings, even in a time
of war and great fear.

E-mail: bobherb@nytimes.com

Posted by Miriam V. Feb. 18
Copyright 2005


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